7-Inch Digital Photo Frame – ET7010

 

This 7-inch digital frame not only can view pictures but also can let you watch movies, listen to music. It supports a lot of memory expand cards.

Digital photo frame

Can view photo, watch movie and listen to music.
Built-in speaker.
Color 7-inch TFT LCD.
Dimension:285 x 175 x 48mm.

7-Inch Digital Photo Frame – PF8600

 

This 7-inch digital frame not only can view pictures but also can let you watch movies, listen to music. It supports a lot of memory expand cards.

Digital photo frame

Can view photo, watch movie and listen to music.
Built-in speaker.
Color 7-inch TFT LCD.
Dimension:250 x 184 x 32mm.

SINGER(R) Introduces New PC and Sewing Machine Merge !

he new SINGER FUTURA machine, with its unique link to a computer, makes embroidery much easier. With the SINGER FUTURA machine, the embroiderer prepares everything on their PC and simply sends the complete design, with all colors, through the USB Port directly into the SINGER FUTURA machine, ready for stitching. Sewers can view their designs in full color on their PC versus an LCD screen built into the sewing machine. The USB connectivity makes transferring the design effortless without scrolling through menus or files.

The embroidering possibilities are endless using the SINGER FUTURA machines. In addition to the 120 built-in embroidery designs, the new product line can receive, adapt and embroider designs from other manufacturers as well as thousands of elite embroidery designs available online. Additional software packages are also available for use with the new SINGER FUTURA machine with the following tools that make advanced embroidery techniques easy to accomplish.

  • AutoPunch - Converts clip art into embroidery
  • Editing - Personalizes existing designs
  • HyperFont - Converts your PC’s TrueType font into embroidery
  • Auto Cross-Stitch - Converts clip art into cross-stitching design
  • Photo Stitch - Converts photos into stitch-filled embroidery design.

Kodak’s New Wi-Fi Card ! Lets You Print Photos

kodak802.11b.jpg
Kodak has unveiled an 802.11b WiFi card for its Easyshare Printer Dock Plus. With the card inserted in the dock you can send pictures from a docked Easyshare camera across your wireless network, allowing you to share, display or print anywhere the signal is strong enough. The dock also becomes a wireless printer for any 802.11b-enabled computer or Easyshare camera. It should be available in June for just under $100.

So not only does Kodak not want you to go to Wal-Mart to print your photos, they don’t even want you to walk over to your computer and plug your camera in. This may fall into the category of giving us what we didn’t know we needed, or just giving us what we don’t really need, but either way it’s a strong attack in the ongoing American war on physical activity. Its been interesting watching Kodak reinvent (and save) itself as a digital imaging company, and it’s good to see that process involves innovation and not just massive layoffs.

Solar Mouse Sees the Light of Day

Solar Mouse.jpgLiving green starts with the little things, such as turning off the TV when you leave the house or not running the water as you brush your teeth. So why not go back to basics on your computer setup, and try a solar-powered mouse?

A research group in the Netherlands has created the Sole Mio, which it claims to be the “world’s first exclusively photovoltaic-powered computer mouse.” The Sole Mio is currently in trials to determine whether regular use is enough to charge the mouse.

Though the mouse can get some charge from artificial light, the real challenge is whether computer users will be willing to stop working long enough in the day to throw the mouse under some real sunlight to be charged. The group estimates that with solar-powered mice, “several hundred million batteries could be saved annually on a global scale.”

This Umbrella Tells You If You’ll Be Singing in the Rain

ambient-umbrella.jpgThere are some things in life that people have but hope they’ll never need, like pepper spray, accident insurance, or a copy of The Villain. But how about something that you hope will tell you you don’t need it?

Cambridge, Mass.-based Ambient Devices, whose motto is “Information everywhere” and lives up to it by producing things like Internet-connected refrigerators and colorful stock-market indicators has developed the $140 Ambient Umbrella — an umbrella with a radio receiver in the handle that gets weather data from Accuweather.com. If rain is expected in the next twelve hours, the handle glows; depending on the type of rain expected, the light pulses at different frequencies.

Now if they could just build something into the handle so I’d stop forgetting umbrellas on the train, I’d be all set.